Paramedics Save Man Holding Gun to His Head


Annie Sweeney | | Wednesday, March 19, 2008


CHICAGO -- When Chicago firefighter-paramedic John Funk walked into the bedroom, he thought he saw the elderly sick man sitting on the bed with a phone.

Then he looked a little closer.

The 87-year-old man had a gun pressed to his temple.

"He kept saying just get out of here, get out of here," said Funk, who backed out of the room while telling the man to relax.

Soon Funk was joined by his commander, Lt. Gilbert Munoz, who cleared the house and stayed in the hall with Funk chatting with the man.

"There is no training,'' Munoz said of the Tuesday morning incident. "You just fly by the seat of your pants.''

Munoz had been at the house, in the 9600 block of South Indiana, an hour earlier -- just before 7 a.m. -- to check on the man because he was unconscious but refused to go to a hospital. This time, his doctor was insisting he go, Munoz said.

"He was just a little distraught over his medical condition worsening,'' Munoz said. "He had remorse and regret in his voice.''

The man also shared that he was an Army veteran and had bought the gun -- which appeared to be about 30 years old -- to protect his wife.

Munoz stayed just outside the room and reasoned with the man. Eventually the man walked to Munoz and handed him the gun.

"Lt. Munoz did a superb job in talking to the patient,'' said Neil Sennett, a paramedic who was also at the scene. "He was talking to him, calming him down and reassuring him he was going to be OK.''

As soon as the man released the gun, Sennett -- who has handled guns in the military -- unloaded it. Then they took the man to the hospital -- all the while telling him that everything was all right as he apologized over and over, Sennett said.

"I have walked into rooms where there have been guns on table but never an [armed] patient,'' Sennett said. "I am delighted that the gentleman was OK. . . . He was just a gentleman that needs some psychiatric care and he needs his other [medical] problems taken care of.''


Connect: Have a thought or feedback about this? Add your comment now
Related Topics: Operations and Protcols, Special Patients, Patient Management

What's Your Take? Comment Now ...

Featured Careers & Jobs in EMS


Get JEMS in Your Inbox

 

Fire EMS Blogs


Blogger Browser

 

EMS Airway Clinic

Innovation & Progress

Follow in the footsteps of these inspirational leaders of EMS.
More >

Multimedia Thumb

Oklahoma Hospital Report

Head injuries and abdominal wounds after tornado strikes Moore, Oklahoma
Watch It >


Multimedia Thumb

Massive Tornado Touches Down in Oklahoma

Mile-wide tornado hits Oklahoma City suburb or Moore.
Watch It >


Multimedia Thumb

Large Tornado Rips Through Neighborhoods South of Oklahoma City

A monster tornado ripped through Oklahoma City, destroying homes and schools
Watch It >


Multimedia Thumb

Milwaukee County EMS to Install New Heart Monitors in Ambulances

Milwaukee County invested $1.1 million to upgrade heart monitors in ambulances.
Watch It >


Multimedia Thumb

Massive Tornado Strikes Oklahoma City Suburb

Neighborhoods in Moore flattened and blown apart.
More >


Multimedia Thumb

Connecticut Commuter Trains Collide

Five people have critical injuries in derailment outside of Fairfield.
More >


Multimedia Thumb

Photos from RETTMobil: German Boxer

Photos of the German Boxer armored ambulance on display at RETTmobil.
More >


Multimedia Thumb

Field Bridge Xpress ePCR on iPad, Android, Kindle Fire

Sneak peek of customizable run forms & more.
Watch It >


Multimedia Thumb

Braun Ambulances' EZ Door Forward

Helps to create a safer ambulance module.
Watch It >


Multimedia Thumb

The AmbuBus®, Bus Stretcher Conversion Kit - EMS Today 2013

AmbuBus®, Bus Stretcher all-hazards preparedness & response tool
Watch It >


Multimedia Thumb

VividTrac offered by Vivid Medical - EMS Today 2013

VividTrac, affordable high performance video intubation device.
Watch It >


More Product Videos >